State Ex Rel. Freeze v. Taylor

4 P.2d 479, 90 Mont. 439, 1931 Mont. LEXIS 120
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 17, 1931
DocketNo. 6,810.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 4 P.2d 479 (State Ex Rel. Freeze v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Freeze v. Taylor, 4 P.2d 479, 90 Mont. 439, 1931 Mont. LEXIS 120 (Mo. 1931).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY

delivered the. opinion of the court.

This proceeding grew out of an attempt by certain electors of Ravalli county to consolidate the county and all cities and towns therein into a municipal corporation to be known as the City and County of Ravalli, under the provisions of Chapter 121 of the Session Laws of 1923.

*442 It appears that a petition, signed by 909 persons who represented themselves to be qualified electors of Ravalli county, being more than twenty per cent, of the electors thereof, whose names appeared on the great register on the date of the filing of the petition, requesting that the question of consolidation be submitted to the qualified electors of the county, was filed with the county clerk on the fourth day of August, 1930. On the same .day, the county clerk delivered to the board of county commissioners, then in session, the petition with his certificate thereto attached, that “there are 4,274 registered voters in Ravalli county, at date of filing attached petition, and I further certify that there are 909 qualified electors signing such petition, which constituted more than twenty per cent, of the registered electors of said county.” On the next day, there was filed with the county clerk a petition signed by 118 of the persons who had signed the original petition, requesting that their names be withdrawn therefrom. The county clerk immediately certified that petition to the board. After the lapse of ten days, the board having failed to take any action, relator brought this action in mandamus, praying that the court order the board to issue a proclamation calling for the election, and fixing a date therefor. Thereupon an order to show cause and an alternative writ of mandate were issued. Upon the hearing, the court ordered issued a peremptory writ commanding the board of county commissioners to “issue a proclamation containing the things required by law and particularly the purpose for which such special election is to be held and the date of holding the same, which proclamation must be published and posted in the manner prescribed by law.” From this order, the defendants, as the board of county commissioners of Ravalli county, have appealed.

Chapter 121, referred to above, is “An Act Authorizing and Providing for the Consolidation and Merging of the Corporate Existence and Government of any County in the State and of all Cities and Towns Situated Therein Into One Municipal Corporation and Government, Defining the Powers Thereof and *443 Providing a Commission-Manager Plan of Government therefor.”

Section 2 of the Act provides: “The question of the abandonment and termination of the separate corporate existence and government of a county and of each and every city and town therein and the consolidation and merging of the existence and government of such county and each and all of the cities and towns therein into one municipal corporation and government, under the provisions of this Act, shall be submitted to the qualified electors of such county if a petition be filed in the office of the county clerk of such county, signed by at least twenty per centum (20%) of the electors of said county whose names appear on the official register of voters of the county on the date of the filing of such petition, requesting that such question be submitted to the qualified electors of the county. ’ ’

Section 3: “ Such petition shall be substantially in the form and shall be signed, verified and filed in the manner prescribed in this Act for initiative, referendum and recall petitions, and shall designate therein the name by which such consolidated government is to be known, which must be either that of the county or of some one of the cities or towns therein. If the county clerk shall find that such petition, or amended petition, so filed, is signed by the required number of qualified electors he shall so certify to the board of county commissioners of such county at their next regular meeting, and such board shall thereupon, and within ten days after receiving the clerk’s certificate, order a special election to be held at which election such question shall be submitted to the qualified electors of the county. Such order shall specify the time when such election shall be held, which shall be not less than ninety nor more than one hundred and twenty days from and after the day when such order is made, and the board of county commissioners shall immediately upon making such order issue a proclamation setting forth the purpose for which such special election is held and the date of holding the same, which proclamation must be published and posted in the man *444 ner prescribed by Section 535 Revised Codes of Montana of 1921.”

Subsequent sections, inter alia, relate to the enactment of ordinances by the commission, the governing body of the municipality, and to the exercise of the powers of initiative and referendum by the electorate with respect thereto.

Section 20 provides that if an initiative petition “be found sufficient by the clerk he shall so certify and shall submit the ordinance therein set forth to the commission at its next meeting. * * * ” Section 21 is to the effect that if the commission fails to enact the ordinance proposed by the initiative petition, or passes it in a form different from that set forth in the petition “the committee of the petitioners hereinafter provided for may require that it be submitted to a vote of the electors,” and so forth. Section 26 provides: “If a referendum provision, or amended petition, be found sufficient by the clerk he shall certify that fact to the commission at its next regular meeting,” and a course of action is prescribed. Section 29 provides that “the signatures to initiative, referendum or recall petitions need not all be appended to one paper, but to each separate petition paper there shall be attached an affidavit of the circulator thereof as provided by this section. Each signer of any such petition paper shall sign his name in ink or indelible pencil and shall indicate after his name his place of residence by street and number, or other description sufficient to identify the place. There shall appear on each petition paper the names and addresses of five electors of the municipality, who, as a committee of the petitioners, shall be regarded as responsible for the circulation and filing of the petition.” Following which is the form of the affidavit required.

A consideration of these statutes leads to the conclusion that the sufficiency of the petition is to be determined by the clerk, not by the board of county commissioners. (Laam v. McLaren, 28 Cal. App. 632, 153 Pac. 985, 988; Locher v. Walsh, 17 Cal. App. 727, 121 Pac. 712.) Under the terms of the Act, when a petition, duly certified by the clerk, has been filed with *445 the board, it then has the clear duty of ordering the election, in accordance with the statute. It is, of course, true that a petition void upon its face would not impose an obligation to act; otherwise it is not within the board’s province to question it.

The withdrawal petition came too late.

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Bluebook (online)
4 P.2d 479, 90 Mont. 439, 1931 Mont. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-freeze-v-taylor-mont-1931.